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Endogenous testosterone correlates with parochial altruism in relation to costly punishment in different social settings

Testosterone plays a key role in shaping human social behavior. Recent findings have linked testosterone to altruistic behavior in economic decision tasks depending on group membership and intergroup competition. The preferential treatment of ingroup members, while aggression and discrimination is d...

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Autores principales: Reimers, Luise, Kappo, Eli, Stadler, Lucas, Yaqubi, Mostafa, Diekhof, Esther K.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: PeerJ Inc. 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6717495/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31523506
http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.7537
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author Reimers, Luise
Kappo, Eli
Stadler, Lucas
Yaqubi, Mostafa
Diekhof, Esther K.
author_facet Reimers, Luise
Kappo, Eli
Stadler, Lucas
Yaqubi, Mostafa
Diekhof, Esther K.
author_sort Reimers, Luise
collection PubMed
description Testosterone plays a key role in shaping human social behavior. Recent findings have linked testosterone to altruistic behavior in economic decision tasks depending on group membership and intergroup competition. The preferential treatment of ingroup members, while aggression and discrimination is directed towards outgroup members, has been referred to as parochial altruism. Here we investigated in two consecutive studies, whether testosterone is associated with parochial altruism depending on individual tendency for costly punishment. In the first study, 61 men performed a single-shot ultimatum game (UG) in a minimal group context, in which they interacted with members of an ingroup and outgroup. In the second study, 34 men performed a single-shot UG in a more realistic group context, in which they responded to the proposals of supporters of six political parties during the German election year 2017. Political parties varied in their social distance to the participants’ favorite party as indicated by an individual ranking. Participants of study 2 also performed a cued recall task, in which they had to decide whether they had already encountered a face during the previous UG (old-new decision). In order to make the UG data of study 2 most comparable to the data of study 1, the rejection rates of several parties were combined according to the social distance ranking they achieved. Parties ranked 1 to 3 formed the relatively close and favored ‘ingroup’ that shared similar political values with the participant (e.g., left wing parties), while the ‘outgroup’ consisted of parties ranked from 4 to 6 with more distant or even antagonistic political views (e.g., conservative to right wing parties). In both studies, results showed a parochial pattern with higher rejection rates made in response to outgroup compared to ingroup offers. Interestingly, across studies higher salivary testosterone was associated with higher rejection rates related to unfair outgroup offers in comparison to the unfair offers made by ingroup members. The present findings suggest that latent intergroup biases during decision-making may be positively related to endogenous testosterone. Similar to previous evidence that already indicated a role of testosterone in shaping male parochial altruism in male soccer fans, these data underscore the general, yet rather subtle role of male testosterone also in other social settings.
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spelling pubmed-67174952019-09-13 Endogenous testosterone correlates with parochial altruism in relation to costly punishment in different social settings Reimers, Luise Kappo, Eli Stadler, Lucas Yaqubi, Mostafa Diekhof, Esther K. PeerJ Anthropology Testosterone plays a key role in shaping human social behavior. Recent findings have linked testosterone to altruistic behavior in economic decision tasks depending on group membership and intergroup competition. The preferential treatment of ingroup members, while aggression and discrimination is directed towards outgroup members, has been referred to as parochial altruism. Here we investigated in two consecutive studies, whether testosterone is associated with parochial altruism depending on individual tendency for costly punishment. In the first study, 61 men performed a single-shot ultimatum game (UG) in a minimal group context, in which they interacted with members of an ingroup and outgroup. In the second study, 34 men performed a single-shot UG in a more realistic group context, in which they responded to the proposals of supporters of six political parties during the German election year 2017. Political parties varied in their social distance to the participants’ favorite party as indicated by an individual ranking. Participants of study 2 also performed a cued recall task, in which they had to decide whether they had already encountered a face during the previous UG (old-new decision). In order to make the UG data of study 2 most comparable to the data of study 1, the rejection rates of several parties were combined according to the social distance ranking they achieved. Parties ranked 1 to 3 formed the relatively close and favored ‘ingroup’ that shared similar political values with the participant (e.g., left wing parties), while the ‘outgroup’ consisted of parties ranked from 4 to 6 with more distant or even antagonistic political views (e.g., conservative to right wing parties). In both studies, results showed a parochial pattern with higher rejection rates made in response to outgroup compared to ingroup offers. Interestingly, across studies higher salivary testosterone was associated with higher rejection rates related to unfair outgroup offers in comparison to the unfair offers made by ingroup members. The present findings suggest that latent intergroup biases during decision-making may be positively related to endogenous testosterone. Similar to previous evidence that already indicated a role of testosterone in shaping male parochial altruism in male soccer fans, these data underscore the general, yet rather subtle role of male testosterone also in other social settings. PeerJ Inc. 2019-08-28 /pmc/articles/PMC6717495/ /pubmed/31523506 http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.7537 Text en ©2019 Reimers et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, reproduction and adaptation in any medium and for any purpose provided that it is properly attributed. For attribution, the original author(s), title, publication source (PeerJ) and either DOI or URL of the article must be cited.
spellingShingle Anthropology
Reimers, Luise
Kappo, Eli
Stadler, Lucas
Yaqubi, Mostafa
Diekhof, Esther K.
Endogenous testosterone correlates with parochial altruism in relation to costly punishment in different social settings
title Endogenous testosterone correlates with parochial altruism in relation to costly punishment in different social settings
title_full Endogenous testosterone correlates with parochial altruism in relation to costly punishment in different social settings
title_fullStr Endogenous testosterone correlates with parochial altruism in relation to costly punishment in different social settings
title_full_unstemmed Endogenous testosterone correlates with parochial altruism in relation to costly punishment in different social settings
title_short Endogenous testosterone correlates with parochial altruism in relation to costly punishment in different social settings
title_sort endogenous testosterone correlates with parochial altruism in relation to costly punishment in different social settings
topic Anthropology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6717495/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31523506
http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.7537
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